“If this was a death penalty state, you’d be getting the chair!” says judge

Michigan judge called Camia Gamet one of the worst "cold-blooded murders" he has seen

Global Sun Times

Saying that the convicted killer’s murder was by far among the worst “cold-blooded murders” he has seen, Jackson County Circuit Judge John McBain threw the book at Camia Gamet. But according to Fox News, the angry judge served his worse condemnation for Gamet as she snickered while he spoke. “If this was a death penalty state, you’d be getting the chair,” he informed the seemingly unrepentant convicted killer.

photo credit - WN

The A 31-year-old woman was convicted of the murder of her boyfriend in their shared Jackson, Michigan apartment. The heinous act took place last May 13th where she stabbed and beat Marcel Hill to death. She had stabbed him to death by using a filet knife. The judge and courtroom spectators watched as Gamet openly snickered and rolled her eyes.

The judge eyed the defiant defendant and chastised her at her sentencing by stating, “You gutted him like a fish in that apartment. You were relentless. You stabbed, you stabbed, you stabbed, you stabbed, you stabbed until he was dead,” reported Fox News.

Gamet had claimed at her March trial that she thought she was fighting an intruder in the darkened apartment, which apparently did not hold up in court. The deceased, who had been stabbed 11 times, told the police Gamet had hit him in the head with a hammer.

The convicted murderer will spend the rest of her life behind bars without the possibility of parole. Electric chair not available yet…

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Kevin Fobbs is the former community concerns columnist for 12 years with The Detroit News, covering community, family relations, domestic abuse, education, government relations, education, and dispute resolution. He was government and civic affairs director for Soul Source, a Christian news magazine, and host of The Kevin Fobbs Show. His faith-based Hearken The Watchmen column provides insight and answers on family, faith, and how to arrive at faith-based solutions to life challenges. You may contact Kevin with your comments and questions.